Neighborly Ways of Being: “Net building and Communal ...



Reclaiming Community Out of Catastrophe: Communal Practices That Build on Naturally Sustaining Webs

Peggy Sax

Re-authoring Teaching

Middlebury, Vermont

Submitted to

THE JOURNAL OF SYSTEMIC THERAPIES

Special Issue on “Community Approaches to Solving Problems”

April, 2012

Abstract

Richly tending to webs of connection can fortify a person’s will to live, contribute to experiences of personal worth, and strengthen feelings of belonging, community and place. This article explores “neighborly ways of being” in the lives of two people –Joan and Suzanne– each of whom survived personal catastrophes, thanks to their special social nets. Each woman vividly describes a unique “Paradise in hell” (Solnit 2009) - a restored sense of meaning and purpose to her life when she is able to transform her painful experiences to support for others. The author identifies “communal practices” that actively strengthen naturally sustaining communities of support, augment and extend friendship circles, build community-mindedness, foster engagement in communal creative expression, and shape identity as being of value. These intentional community-building practices build giving back and “paying forward” into therapeutic work – and foster the deep satisfaction that comes from making meaningful contributions to others’ lives.

Keywords: Communal Practices, ethic of circulation, narrative therapy, neighborly ways of being, relational ethics, paradise in hell, naturally sustaining webs, rhizomes.

Therapeutic conversations can strengthen social connectedness not only within the family, but in naturally sustaining communities. I aspire to show how therapeutic work that restores a person’s sense of community-mindedness, solidarity and connection is highly ethical yet beyond traditional understandings of psychotherapy. These “communal” ways of working challenge assumptions about working in individualized ways and demonstrate how therapeutic practices can strengthen communities of support that include – but do not center on – therapists, coaches, consultants and social workers.

In sharp contrast to the tradition of professional distancing that customarily typifies case presentations, I offer firsthand stories in the hopes that readers can enter directly into the lives of two women – Joan and Suzanne[i]. Both women survived psychological catastrophes, thanks to the peer-to-peer support, friendship circles, supportive actions of the community around them, and their own giving-back practices. Each vividly describes a restored sense of meaning and purpose to her life when she is able to transform painful experiences to become useful to others.[ii]

As therapist, I often act as a conduit for the people who consult with me to extend their naturally sustaining communities. Together, we explore such relationally-engaged activities as possibilities for giving and receiving peer support; engaging with online support groups, social media; making and sharing music; volunteering for community suppers, homeless shelters, Hospice and other community services; participating in community building projects; sharing resources, and giving back to others in need. Joan adds to this list, “Whatever it takes.”

Joan and Suzanne’s stories illustrate a therapeutic approach based on diminished hierarchy and social interdependency, and that resists the so-called professionalism that draws sharp distinctions between practitioners’ lives and the lives of people who seek help (White 1993; Madsen 2009). Hopefully, these stories convey how much I learn from the knowledge of people who seek my services (Sax 2008). At the same time, I hope to render visible – and legitimize - intentional therapeutic practices to build community based on an ethic of collaboration, decentered-influential therapeutic posture (White 1997) and relational ethics (McNamee 2009).

As I worked on this paper, additional voices kept me company. I kept close to me the wise counsel of Prudence, a veteran consumer of human services with a wealth of experience, who once told me, “Therapists come and go but family and friends more often stick around for a lifetime.” Responding to the question of how therapists can best be of use, she replied “They can strengthen communities of concern and help link people to their circle of support (Sax 2000). I also remembered something Chava – a woman I work with who has now emerged from a very difficult battle with depression - once wrote in email correspondence, “This way of working widens the circle of healing beyond two people talking in an office, as deeply valuable as that is. You demonstrate in your work something that I know you deeply believe in – that too much emphasis on pre-existing theories about therapy and on how the therapist-client relationship "should" be can actually interfere with healing.”

Narrative Influences

“What is solidarity”? I am thinking of a solidarity that is constructed by therapists who refuse to draw a sharp distinction between their lives and lives, of others, who refuse to marginalize those persons who seek help; by therapists who constantly confront the fact that if faced with the troubles of others, they just might not be doing nearly as well. (White 1993), p 132.)

For the past 20 years, my practice has been highly influenced by the ideas and practices of Narrative Therapy. Narrative ways of working build on: 1) folk psychology traditions wherein insider knowledge is privileged over expert vocabularies, and significant care is taken to ensure that language conveys people’s actual experiences, rather than others’ interpretations of these experiences (White 2004); 2) a respectful commitment to an ethic of collaboration, attention to power relations, and influential yet decentered therapeutic posture (White 1997); 3) witnessing practices that incorporate audiences into the therapy process (White 2007); 4) a belief in encouraging people to move beyond dependency on expert knowledge, “to negotiate the passage from novice to veteran, from client to consultant (Epston and White 1992).” 5) “re-membering conversations” that invite people to purposefully engage with significant figures that have contributed to their lives, to contemplate how this connection shapes their sense of who they are and what their life is about, and to imagine what they may have contributed to the life of this significant figure (White 2007).

Narrative approaches also draw from “an ethic of circulation”(Lobovits, Maisel et al. 1995) that challenges our traditional assumptions about the need for absolute privacy in psychotherapy while simultaneously honoring professional ethics - protecting confidentiality, avoiding exploitation, and safeguarding the unique value of the professional relationship. Lobovits, Maisel and Freeman propose “the need for privacy increases when people’s experience of problems is viewed in terms of illness/pathology or other problem-saturated descriptions.” p. 224.).

Neighborly Ways of Being and Communal Practices

Based on my experiences as an American living in Vermont, I originally chose “neighborly ways of being” as a metaphor for the social healing I witnessed through my conversations with Joan and Suzanne. Attempting to translate “neighborly ways” into French for a workshop in Bordeaux, France, we soon discovered cultural differences in local meanings and cultural-historical references for “neighborliness[iii].” These translation challenges seem analogous to the acculturation that marcela polenco described in the "re-authoring of narrative therapy" into her Colombian Spanish while aspiring to honor local linguistic contexts and resist longstanding cultural and intellectual colonization of English as a “lingua franca” (polanco 2011).

I was delighted to discover the term “communal practices,” which Lynn Hoffman proposes as an alternative to “clinical practices” to legitimize therapeutic work that strengthens naturally sustaining communities of support (Hoffman 2011). She also coined the terms “Webwork,” “weblets or “webify” to capture the spirit of our own relational efforts as we reject unitary forms like Individual, Family, and System, along with the hierarchical templates characteristic our professional life[iv]. Borrowing phrases by John Shotter (Shotter 1998; Shotter 2010), Hoffman refers to the shift from "aboutness” thinking to "withness" thinking (Hoffman 2007). She attributes Tom Andersen in saying he was tired of speaking about “therapies,” and preferred to talk about human art, "the art to participate in social bonds with others." I join Lynn Hoffman in looking toward collaborative, reflective, and narrative approaches to take the lead in attending to these life-sustaining webs as at least as integral to healing as the clinical practices that are part of every professional training program.

“Webifying” is one of a number of colorful weaves in the tapestry of therapeutic work. I always offer these opportunities as a possibility, with the option to say no. When chosen, I do my best to continuously check in to align with what works best for persons placing their trust in me, and my ethical stance. I strive to never presume or take liberties based on earlier choices – rather to continually include clients in decisions in whether or how our work might strengthen their social supports outside of the therapeutic relationship.

Reclaiming Community Out of Catastrophe

Our world news is filled with accounts of climatic extremes and weather events linked to global warming such as floods, tornadoes, droughts, wildfires, tsunamis, hurricanes, earthquakes and volcano eruptions. These recorded and transcribed conversations took place in Vermont, USA in September, 2011 shortly after Tropical Storm Irene devastated a number of local communities.

Whereas movies, media and authorities highlight social deterioration and chaos during disaster, the book A Paradise Built in Hell (Solnit 2009) emphasizes alternative accounts of solidarity, joy, friendship, love, generosity, spontaneous acts of courage, resourcefulness and resiliency. Following the aftermath of five major North American disasters, Solnit traces hidden patterns and meanings within the broader cultural histories of disaster wherein ordinary people improvise newfound society connecting them with yearnings for community, purposefulness and meaningful work.

Reclaiming community out of catastrophe is also the purposeful work of the therapist. No matter how directly impacted by the storm, Joan and Suzanne approach to personal catastrophe echoes Solnit’s remarks: “Disasters are, most basically, terrible, tragic, grievous, and no matter what positive side effects and possibilities they produce, they are not to be desired. But by the same measure, those side effects should not be ignored because they arise amid devastation. The desires and possibilities awakened are so powerful they shine even from wreckage, carnage and ashes.”(Solnit 2009) p.6.

Joan: “Whatever It Takes”

Joan first traveled to consult with me less than a month after her husband, Joseph, took dramatic action to end his life. Devastated by his suicide, she tearfully reflected, “I am usually a very upbeat person.” Our initial conversations centered on Joan’s anguish – the profound grief, guilt and suicidal thoughts. I was relieved to learn that Joan’s mother and stepfather, her extended family, stepdaughter, brothers, friends and neighbors – were all rallying to envelope her with support in facing this major crisis of her life. “I really didn’t feel like I deserved to live and luckily my community felt otherwise.”

Initially, Joan felt uncomfortable sharing the acuteness of her own suicidal thoughts with her family and friends. Together we made phone calls to discover emergency counseling services through her local community mental health center; we talked about joining an online community of support for suicide survivors. Joan also embraced my offer to arrange for her to meet another woman who had lived through a very similar experience, and had rebuilt her life. Sally joined our third counseling session. Later Joan reflected, “It’s never the same, but definitely, she was forging ahead and finding her way. This experience of losing someone to suicide is so powerful. People who’ve had a similar experience - hers was so similar, her heart opened up to me. She was a complete stranger and I would do anything for her. I felt that from her also.”

Exploring Online Resources. After searching the Internet for support groups for survivors of suicide, Joan became an active participant in “Alliance for Hope,” the online forum that most appealed to her. She also traveled once to a small “Survivors” support group in a town about an hour from her home, led by the local hospice organization, “a small group of wonderful people, banding together for this very sad common experience, helping each other.” Due to the storm it was a struggle for Joan to make the trip, but she hopes soon to return. “Even if I don’t, it’s good to know that it’s there if I need it.” Joan also checked out the Hospice library. “If you don’t want to meet with people, you can just read books. For some people, that’s what they need. They don’t want to be sharing and talking about it in an open way. But for others it’s essential.

Stepping out into Local Community. Joan soon began to link with others in her local community “There are surprisingly, amazingly, so many people who have been touched by suicide - whether it’s the loss of a husband, a brother, a father, a fiancée, a first wife.” Joan says it’s been hard to realize how many people have struggled with depression - alarming to find out the numbers of people who take their life, and how many people then are impacted. “I’ve connected with other people in my community who I never knew before but now we have this shared experience and we are trying to help each other.”

Paying it Forward. Joan’s community was profoundly impacted by Tropical Storm Irene with homes, roads, bridges severely damaged. Her community has held her through the really rough times. She became actively involved in community building efforts – delivering supplies, making meals, planning events, and tending to neighbors’ needs. In a strange way, the storm was therapeutic for her. “They had given me so much support when I was devastated, I was able to help them in a way that I was happy to do.” Yet Joan’s clarity that she really wants to live came before the storm. Our therapeutic conversations built on her foundation of choosing life, and the theme of “giving back” - being there for others and participating in the flow of her community.

From Novice to Veteran. Seven months after her husband’s death, Joan generously gave permission for me to record and transcribe several therapeutic conversations. She tearfully began our first recorded interview by expressing her hope that her story will help someone else. “If I can make it through this loss, this awful loss, I also have an example for people. I'm a totally changed person now. I can never go back to what I was before. But you have to go on and you have to do whatever it takes.” Joan says she doesn’t worry anymore about what she doesn’t have. “I just think I’m lucky for what I have – and the community has rebounded for me too. They have said, “Okay, we are here for you too.

Suzanne and Jamie: “Sharing Our Heart Songs”

Suzanne first came to consult with me soon after her son Jamie had relapsed, after a two-year period of recovery from his opiate addiction. “That’s when I started going to counseling, because my life was taken over by this massive grief. There was no room for anything else. I fell into the blackness.” Suzanne says that talking at that time was very powerful. The following year, Jamie died of a heroin overdose.

Jamie is Suzanne’s “sole/soul” child; they are – and always will be - very close, both in life and since his death. “Jamie is with me every step of the way.” Four years after Jamie’s death, Suzanne is no longer my client, yet we have stayed in touch as fellow community members. She agreed for me to record an interview in my office with Patty, her co-leader of “Sharing Our Heart Songs” – their local parent bereavement support group. A week later, I followed up with a home visit where Suzanne generously took me on a recorded tour of “Jamie’s Garden” and “Jamie’s Room filled with precious remembrances of Jamie. In the corner of Jamie’s Room - By a window overlooking Jamie’s garden, - Suzanne showed me The Crying Chair where she spent much of the first year after his death (and continues to visit from time to time).

Exploring Local Libraries and Community Resources. Soon after Jamie’s death, Suzanne read every book she could get in her hands on death and dying. “I needed to learn everything I could about death because my son had gone there. So I needed to learn.” I lent her books from my office bookshelves. She found others in her town library. Suzanne then found books online that she ordered through her local bookstore. When she heard that the local hospice office had a lending library, “I walked in the door of Hospice and all these books that I hadn’t been able to find were sitting there on the shelf.” Soon she became the Hospice’s librarian. Suzanne was so taken with the whole Hospice experience that she wanted to take the training to become a Hospice volunteer. Patty, the Director of Hospice, said, “It might be a little soon. Maybe wait till you’re a year out of the loss.” And that is what she did.

Finding Places of Comfort. When Suzanne walks through the Hospice door, because of the comfort it gives her, she feels like it’s her home away from home. She says she feel so grateful to live in her community with three places where she can give of herself. “I love my house. I love Hospice. And I love going to the Humane Society, which is the other place I spend lots of time because it’s just pure love over there. Those animals need that love and they make no judgments.” Soon after Jamie’s death, Suzanne experienced freedom visiting the animals where nobody knew her as a bereaved Mom. “I would just go in with my homemade feathers on sticks and play with the cats; slowly I started telling one of the cats and the kittens that I was a bereaved mom. One of the first cats I worked with had lost all her babies. She was like a kindred Mom spirit.”

Re-membering Jamie. Suzanne put together “Jamie’s Book” where she has brought together favorite photos, quotes, sayings and readings that have touched her heart and helped her survive this profound loss. Knowing that she would probably get to know other people in her community who will face loss in their life, Suzanne gathered together these inspired writings so that she may share them with others. “Sure enough, I’ve had many opportunities to use it, and some with other parents that have lost children.” Suzanne continues to make “Jamie Heart-art” - collages with favorite pictures, places and saying - and sends cards on special dates to Jamie’s loved ones. She made candles for everybody in the family with his name, his birth and his angel date (the anniversary of his death) written on glass candle holders; “We burn them every year on those anniversaries; none of us want (the candle) to ever burn out but we have realized that we can put a tea-light in it once it burns down, so we are safe. We will always have Jamie’s candle.”

Holding a Candle for Each Other. Suzanne believes it crucial for her to meet other moms who had survived the loss of a child. “They kind of held the light for me.” She discovered a local branch of a national support group for bereaved parents. Yet that particular model was very structured and not comfortable for her. “So I went to Patty and said, “I want to do it in a different way, because I think the need is out there.” With the help of the Hospice organization, Suzanne started a bereavement parent group “to hold the light for others.” At first, she worked as a facilitator in training with David, an experienced bereavement counselor. After about six months, Patty and Suzanne started working together. Rather than being directed by a national organization, they let the parents direct the group. Suzanne’s favorite part of the group is when people bring photos and talk about their children. She loves the way group members are so open with each other. “Whether they know it or not, when they walk into that room, they’re going to be getting a hug from the group.”

Sharing Hope. Last spring, Suzanne and Patty organized a conference for bereaved parents, ‘Transforming Loss Into Hope.’ “That day at the conference, to be in that environment with all of these others Moms who had lost children was one of the most powerful days of my life. I was so filled up with love. My feet didn’t hit the floor all day. It was an amazing experience. And that night, I went home and I just crashed. I cried and I cried and I couldn’t stop.” Her husband asked, “Why are you crying?” Upon reflection, Suzanne responded, “I had taken in all that pain and I had kept it together all day long and, but it was so much, because there was so much of it there. My heart just broke for all of those parents.”

Four years after Jamie’s death, Suzanne reflects, “A broken heart is an open heart. I just take in so much more now.” When with another mom who has lost a child, she says, “I can’t say I know how you feel, but I can say, ‘I know how it feels to lose a child.’ There’s just some connection that we have with each other because nobody else can even imagine.” People say all the time. “I couldn’t bear it. I would never be able to survive.” In response, Suzanne says, “Well, I truly hope you never have to know what it’s like. But I would have said that too. And you know what? I found ways to live it.”

Further Reflections

Joan and Suzanne’s stories captivate me, and provide ongoing inspiration in my work and daily life. We have cried and laughed together. I still smile when remembering Joan’s account of arriving in her storm-devastated community just in time for local teens to unload and distribute a truckload of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream; I vividly remember her tale of traveling across the state shortly after the storm to drop off clothing at the Good Will second hand clothing store, in search of a second hand suit for a colleague who lost everything to the storm, and in the process buying herself 27 pairs of shoes! Most recently, Joan recounted how she reclaimed her love for dancing -five nights in a row!

Joan was genuinely touched by the opportunity for me to record and transcribe several of our sessions, and for her hard-earned wisdom to reach others.. I reassured her that we would disguise all identifiable information. Joan choose her pseudonym, responded to questions with supreme eloquence, and listened attentively whenever I played back her own words. When I asked her what it was like to participate in these interviews, knowing that her words could make a difference to others, Joan smiled while expressing delight ,“I think I know now how authors feel.” While she wouldn’t have sought out this unusual opportunity to tell her story, Joan now reflects “Maybe someone (reading) this will say, ‘Okay she's been through the wringer, and she was totally wrung out. And somehow she is able to climb up and get dressed and do something positive in the world and maybe that's what it's all about.”

Joan and I recently resumed meeting after taking a break over the Vermont winter. She called when there was something in particular she wanted to explore with me. Our conversations continue to touch on many topics as she lives with the aftermath of her husband’s suicide. “It takes a long time to recover, doesn’t it?” she lamented. We talk about whatever concerns Joan brings to the session. Building her naturally sustaining web of support, giving back and paying it forward are only part of our therapeutic work. When we stop scheduling appointments, I trust Joan will find me if she ever wants to meet again in the future. I am an important – but not central -member of her circle of support.

Most of my therapeutic work with Suzanne took place before Jamie’s death. Afterward Suzanne came to counseling a couple times, but soon realized “I didn’t need it anymore, because the fear was gone that my son was going to die.” She further reflected, “Okay, I can figure this out now, because he’s not suffering anymore. The day he died, not only did he get saved that day, I too was saved from watching that spiral that he was in. And I believe that he just didn’t have the tools in his toolbox for this lifetime to really have changed the course. And I knew that. I know that.”

While writing this article, I bumped into Suzanne in the local Food Co-op where she works. We stood in the aisle talking for several minutes. She glowed telling me about the beautiful baby that she takes care of every Monday, her great-nephew. Suzanne further enthused about some new developments from this week’s Heartsongs’ meeting. I reminded her of the time four years ago, shortly after her son’s death, when she had trouble imagining ever going back her old job. Just look at her now! No longer clients, we are now Anam Cara - the Gaelic phrase for “Soul Friend” (O'Donohue 1998) - and co-conspirators on behalf of our local community.

Spreading like Rhizomes

Lynn Hoffman has been a significant figure within the field of family therapy from its early beginnings, with a gift for capturing the significance of developments such as the shift in central metaphor from systems to stories (Hoffman 1993; Hoffman 2002). Inspired by French philosophers (Deleuze and Guattari 1994), Hoffman joins her colleague, Chris Kinman to propose the "rhizome" as a central metaphor for a collaborative framework in the 21st century (Hoffman 2009). Unlike the ‘System,’ which derives from engineering and technology, rhizomes are tied to the natural world. The rhizome metaphor captures the spirit of web-building, akin to the spread of daffodils or ginger that spread underground, often sending out roots and shoots from its nodes in unpredictable ways. We never know where new “weblets” will appear - sometimes directly linked to our communal practices, and at other times appearing in more indirect ways, or even on their own This link with nature privileges a kind of communication that Bateson called “the grammar of the Creatura,” a language which is based on gestures, images, embodiment, and similitude. “ (Hoffman 2008).

Ethics of Care

With these communal practices in mind, I re-visited the debate about the feminist ethics of care at the heart of moral and political thinking of social work and constructionist professional practice (Parton and O'Byrne 2000; Parton 2003). Other authors use the term “an ethic of care” to describe practices by people in a range of circumstances that evoke a sense of solidarity, extending and expressing care into wider communities (Sevenhuijsen 1998). Frances Hancock and David Epston refer to an ethic of hospitality - “older and somewhat ‘wiser’ traditions of the ‘care’ of and ‘respect’ for others, especially those in some sort of need or vulnerability” (Hancock and Epston 2005).

All of these characteristics are available to both women and men. The relational stance that we are all proposing for practitioners is based on ethical but not institutional relationships. Characteristics of mutual interdependence, and shared respect cited by Davies include: “reflectively using expertise and experience; creating an active community in which a solution can be negotiated; recognizing interdependence with others; collectively being accountable for practice; an engaged and committed stance towards client or service user; and accept use of self as part of the therapeutic or professional encounter” (Davies 2000) (p 350).

Relational Ethics

Relational ethics signify a shift from centering on individuals and their actions to centering on processes of relating (McNamee 2009). Communal therapeutic practices illustrate relational responsibility in action- different ways of engaging with others and constructing meaning (McNamee and Gergen 1992). More than technique, this stance suggests a radically different approach wherein we no longer assess ethical action based on one uniform set of criteria. What are the ethical postmodern alternatives to the traditions of problem-talk, rigid rules and individual diagnosis? In becoming relationally engaged, McNamee describes a growing attentiveness to what it might mean within a locally and historically situated life.

Relationally responsible therapeutic practices simultaneously support naturally sustaining webs while taking seriously the ethics of confidentiality, and the very real litigious concerns for licensed professionals regulated by professional licensing boards. As McNamee reflects, “When our focus is placed only on the de-contextualized actions of de-contextualized individuals, the opportunity to act ethically is diminished – although the opportunity to act legally might be enhanced” (p 68).

Continued Ripple Effects

The conversation continues about “neighborly ways of being” and communal practices through online participation in The Narrative Practice & Collaborative Inquiry (NPCI) Study Group (Epston and Sax 2011),. Some stories – such as from Margaret in Brisbane, Australia and Regina in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - portray similar acts of courage, resilience and community-building in the aftermath of extreme weather events. Other study group members offer exemplary accounts from work contexts untouched by major weather events. The questions raised by NPCI members continue to reverberate: Who gets left out and how might we better include groups, families and individuals in the community that might fall through these neighborly ways? Do we need a disaster to bring people together? What 'influential discourses' shape local experiences of neighborliness? Are there particular ways of being neighborly that are given value to over other ways? What are some of the effects of busyness on neighborly ways of being without tragedy in communities? Is it a coincidence that illustrations of "neighborly ways" are most commonly from women's lives? What might be different if we were interviewing men? What can men – and women who work with men- learn from these stories?

I continue to wonder how our therapeutic practices can effectively and respectfully build on our clients’ yearnings for community, purposefulness and meaningful work. I do not assume that the therapeutic relationship is intrinsically healing. Often two people in the room is simply not enough. Yet neighborly ways of being and communal practices are not a one-size fits all solution for everyone. I do not attempt to engage everyone who consults with me in net-building or giving-back experiences. Some people – at particular times of their lives – wish for their work to be entirely private. For example, I am currently meeting with two mothers each experiencing the anguish of parenting a young adult son in trouble. When I asked about arranging to meet another mother, one woman responded “I am not ready yet.” She may never wish to meet another mother in a therapy session. I will never forget the challenges of engaging a community of friends with a woman who was acutely suicidal and refusing hospitalization. No friend should have to bear that kind of responsibility alone. Looking back, I still don’t have any clear answers.

Bearing Life Together

In two-way accounts of therapy, the therapist takes responsibility to identify, acknowledge and describe specific ways a conversation contributes to his or her life (White 1997). Often people comment on the power of knowing the influence of their stories on each other. This article ends with a letter from a workshop participant I received shortly after I shared Suzanne’s story in Bordeaux:

Dear Suzanne,

The image that particularly stays with me is when you shared about the candle and not wanting it to burn down, and then realizing you could put a new tea candle in when it burned down.

For me this is a wonderful image that reflects what I see in you of wonderful resiliency and creativity, showing that there is always some way to transform things.

How you can smile and laugh when you tell the story of the crying chair and spending hours and days and months just crying there.

What you shared touched me on many levels. Today in my life I am facing some difficult challenges and although they are not at all so devastating as losing a loved one to death from drugs, they are causing me much confusion and anguish. The transformations you have made through creating- spaces, gardens, and heart art, help remind me of hope and transformation, of having to get through the darkness. To another place, where the pain won’t necessarily be gone, but at least I will believe there is some meaning, even if I don't know it; the belief that I will be able to find another candle when the first one burns out.

Thank you of reminding me of hope and light even in the darkest hour and of the power of creativity.

I passed on the note Suzanne, and she quickly wrote back her appreciation. “It touches me deeply to know that my story has touched someone else and perhaps helped them to see something within themselves while learning to bear life.”

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[i] In preparation for a October 13-14, 2011 workshop on “Reconnecting the lives of our clients” in Bordeaux France, I recorded and transcribed eight interviews and one home-visit with three women, Joan, Suzanne and Alice.

[ii] I extend my heartfelt gratitude to the interviewees who gave me permission to record, transcribe and share their compelling stories and hard-earned wisdom. I share their stories here with their permission; they reviewed this paper and helped me choose names and identifiable information.

[iii] . I am grateful to the workshop sponsor Pierre Blanc-Sahnoun (La Fabrique Narrative), Charlotte Crettenand and Catherine Mengelle for their written translations and to Elizabeth Feld for oral translation of the Bordeaux workshop.

[iv] People often tell me stories about Alcoholics Anonymous – and Alanon- that illustrate neighborly ways of being and communal practices. Recently, a client described how participating in a 12 step program has become a place to stand with vulnerability, knowing that she is not alone. “There, they hold the space that what you have to say matters.”

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